General Poetry posted October 23, 2023 | Chapters: | ...60 61 -62- 63... |
Kuroko Tanka
A chapter in the book 2023 Gypsy's Tanka
Young Drama Queen
by Gypsy Blue Rose
For Rules, Please Read My Author Notes
young drama queen
wrapped in black mourns not being seen— in love with melancholia |
Melancholia = sadness; depression; gloomy
In KABUKI (Japanese theater), the KUROKO is a theater running crew. They move scenery and props on stage, aiding in scene and costume changes. Kuroko wears all black clothes, head to toe, in order to imply that they are invisible and not part of the action onstage.
Tanka is a Japanese unrhymed poem having about 12 to 31 syllables usually arranged in five lines and read in about two breaths in length when read aloud. The first poets who wrote tanka imitated the Japanese models of a 5-7-5-7-7 syllabic structure in five lines. This resulted in poems that were too long in comparison to Japanese tanka. The first tanka were padded or chopped to meet the fixed number of syllables. Additionally, the third line must transition from the descriptive and image-focused beginning lines into a reflective metaphor, simile, or personification for the closing lines. The subject matter varies, but most tanka are emotionally stirring or profound, and many are about love. click here if you want to read modern tanka examples === click here to read Tanka Society of America === click here if you want to read modern tanka rules
Thank you very much for your time and kind review.
Gypsy
"The poet waits quietly to paint the unsaid." --Atticus
pictures from pinterest
Pays
one point
and 2 member cents. In KABUKI (Japanese theater), the KUROKO is a theater running crew. They move scenery and props on stage, aiding in scene and costume changes. Kuroko wears all black clothes, head to toe, in order to imply that they are invisible and not part of the action onstage.
Tanka is a Japanese unrhymed poem having about 12 to 31 syllables usually arranged in five lines and read in about two breaths in length when read aloud. The first poets who wrote tanka imitated the Japanese models of a 5-7-5-7-7 syllabic structure in five lines. This resulted in poems that were too long in comparison to Japanese tanka. The first tanka were padded or chopped to meet the fixed number of syllables. Additionally, the third line must transition from the descriptive and image-focused beginning lines into a reflective metaphor, simile, or personification for the closing lines. The subject matter varies, but most tanka are emotionally stirring or profound, and many are about love. click here if you want to read modern tanka examples === click here to read Tanka Society of America === click here if you want to read modern tanka rules
Thank you very much for your time and kind review.
Gypsy
"The poet waits quietly to paint the unsaid." --Atticus
pictures from pinterest
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